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Cheap DR with Wireless MAN

Synchronous replication between remote EMC Symmetrix arrays isn't cheap. So when Cleveland-based Ohio Savings Bank built its disaster recovery site, it eyed telecommunications as a place to cut costs. "The big problem with synchronous replication is that you need a really fat pipe," says Donald Janosik, senior network engineer at OSB. Instead, OSB went for a dedicated Gigabit Ethernet connection, with redundant CNT UltraNet Edge FCIP routers. This cost OSB about 9% more than a 44Mb DS3 link, but provided 22 times the bandwidth, Janosik says. DS3 does have its advantages, says Karl Evert, partner marketing manager at CNT. Because SONET is a ring, data traffic can be rerouted if a link goes down. With Ethernet, "if a backhoe goes through your line, you're out of luck." To guard against that, OSB installed Cisco's wireless WT2710 point-to-point broadband system. The beauty of wireless? Besides the equipment, there are no monthly communications charges. Installation wasn't without its challenges, though. "We had to raise the masts ...

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Many IT people are on the fence about automated storage management, but at Allegra Systems in Piscataway, NJ, there's no doubt that automatic file migration software has cut down on the IT staff's workload.